Workers Revolutionary Party
The News Line - Daily Newspaper
Lead Articles Editorials Features Statements Photo Gallery Search News News Archive
WRP
Current News All About Us International Publications Information Contact Us Photo Gallery Your Account
Revolutionary Books
Book Store Trotsky Lenin Marx & Engels More Books
The News Line: Feature Liverpool Women’s hospital strike – Caterers, cleaners & security staff pay battle
CATERING staff, cleaners and security guards are among Unison members who took strike action at Liverpool Women’s Hospital on Monday over their private employer’s refusal to pay them the NHS rates for their jobs.

More than 40 union members are employed by OCS, which supplies contracted out ‘soft facilities’ at the hospital, and delivered a 100% vote in favour of strike action in a formal ballot.

The lowest pay rate for a worker in the NHS is £8.93 per hour, but the OCS staff are paid considerably less than this with some only receiving the minimum legal hourly wage rate of £7.83.  Staff are losing out by up to £2,150 this year alone.

Other staff doing the same jobs at Liverpool Women’s Hospital and at other hospitals are being paid the correct nationally agreed pay rates for NHS workers. A strike over a similar issue was averted at the nearby Walton Centre.

More than 80 staff employed by the company ISS voted to take strike action, but the Walton Centre Trust stepped in to commit to staff that they will receive the NHS rates of pay.

Stephanie Mahoney works as a domestic at Liverpool Women’s Hospital and is paid the minimum wage of £7.83 an hour. ‘It’s a real struggle to cope on the wage that I’m on,’ she says. ‘I’m a single parent and I need to keep a roof over my son’s head. Gas and food bills keep going up for everyone but it’s harder for us to make ends meet.

‘I sometimes work alongside colleagues who are paid £9 an hour, but we’re doing the same work. Colleagues are very supportive of us taking action to get this sorted out because they don’t think it’s right that we’re on lower pay than them. I’ve never been on strike before but I can’t see how else this is ever going to change. We’re all sticking together.’

• Ever since Tory cuts have driven homelessness and child poverty through the roof in the UK, there has been a huge increase in ‘Victorian diseases’ including rickets, scurvy and scarlet fever, new NHS data has revealed. Rickets is a disease in which children’s bones do not develop properly leading to bow legs and disfigurment. It is caused by vitamin D deficiency during children’s early years.

Rickets, scarlet fever and other diseases more commonly seen in the Victorian era are sending increasing numbers to hospital, NHS data for England has revealed. In 2017-18 there were 284,901 admissions for scurvy, vitamin D deficiency, gout and other maladies familiar to the pages of a Dickens novel – up 24 per cent on the year before.

Many of the conditions on the rise go hand in hand with economic inequalities and child food poverty has been linked to the UK’s rising rates of malnutrition and obesity. There were 101,136 admissions last year where vitamin D deficiency was a primary or secondary factor in the admission, a rise of 34 per cent in a year, analysis of NHS Digital data shows.

There were an additional 474 admissions in 2017-18 where the main or secondary reason was rickets, up from 445 the year before. Almost all these cases were young children, with 332 admissions for rickets in children aged nine and under, up from 324 the year before.

A further 80 admissions for rickets were among those aged 10 to 19, up from 67 the year before. The body can get its vitamin D from sunlight and diet, but the UK’s poor weather has prompted experts to say adults and children should take a supplement – particularly if they have darker skin.

The NHS data for 2017-18 also shows huge numbers of people – both young and old – being admitted to hospital with malnutrition. In 2017-18, there were 9,307 admissions where malnutrition was a main or secondary factor, up on the 8,417 the previous year – with 739 having malnutrition as the primary cause.

Among children aged nine and under, 166 admissions were for a primary or secondary diagnosis of malnutrition – up from 143 the year before. Meanwhile, nine admissions were for children aged nine and under who needed treatment for scurvy, up from four the year before.

Dr Benjamin Jacobs, from the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, said it was important that parents ensured their children got enough vitamin D. He said: ‘Being deficient in vitamin D can restrict growth and increases a child’s risk of developing rickets or muscle weakness. As this latest analysis shows, hospital admissions due to rickets are increasing. This is concerning but there are several ways this can be addressed.’

Public Health England recommends children aged one to four receive a supplement containing 10 micrograms (400 IU) of vitamin D daily. Adults should also consider taking a supplement in autumn and winter. The NHS Digital figures for 2017-18 also show there were 165,734 admissions where the patient had a primary or secondary diagnosis of gout – another Victorian-era disease.

This is up from 135,958 the year before. While admissions for whooping cough fell in 2017-18, there were 27 admissions for cholera (up from 24 the year before). There were also 306 for mumps (up from 238) and 1,546 for scarlet fever – up 35 per cent on the 1,146 the year before though the reason for its reemergence is poorly understood.

In 2017-18, there were 5,331 admissions for tuberculosis, down slightly on the year before (5,789). Professor Louis Levy, head of nutrition science at Public Health England, said: ‘During autumn and winter, those not consuming foods naturally containing or fortified with vitamin D should consider a 10 microgram supplement.

‘Those who don’t expose their skin to the sun may not get enough vitamin D from sunlight and should take a supplement all year round. Ethnic minorities with darker skin may not get enough vitamin D during the summer and should consider a supplement throughout the year.’
 
  Login
Username

Password

Please create your own account. As a registered user you will gain more access to this website.
Related Links More in The News Line Most read news in The News Line: GADAFFI IN TRIPOLI – HAGUE IN DISARRAY! Article Rating Average Score: 0
Votes: 0
Vote for this article:
Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

Options Printer Friendly Printer Friendly
Send to a Friend Send to a Friend
Comments Unavailable